Claims
- 1. A method for incorporating foreign matter into living cells having a cell exterior and cell membrane using at least one optical trap comprising,
providing a diffractive optical element for receiving a laser beam and forming a plurality of separate laser beams; providing a focusing element disposed downstream from said diffractive optical element, said diffractive optical element cooperating with said focusing element to separately converge each of the laser beams to form a focussed spot or focal region to establish means for forming a separate optical trap within the spot for each of the particles using one of the separate laser beams for each particle; encapsulating the foreign matter to be transferred in a liposome; using an optical scalpel to cut away enough of the cell exterior to expose a region of the cell membrane for subsequent liposome fusion; using an optical trap to move the liposome into proximity with the cell exterior; fusing the liposome to the cell by at least one of chemically, electrically, or optically fusing using a pulse of laser light directed at the liposome-membrane interface; providing using an additional pulse of laser light to puncture the membrane-liposome interface; and transferring the liposome's contents into the cell with the at least one trap.
- 2. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the foreign matter is not endogenous to the cell.
- 3. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the foreign matter comprises a hydrophillic substance.
- 4. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the foreign matter comprises a nuclear acid molecule selected from the group consisting of RNA, DNA, PNA, a chimeric molecule and an expression factor.
- 5. The method as defined in claim 1 wherein the foreign matter is selected from the group consisting of a protein, polypeptide, a peptide, an amino acid, a hormone, a polysacchiride, a dye and a pharmaceutical agent.
- 6. The method as defined in claim 1 further including the steps of recording microscope images during incorporation of foreign matter into the living cell.
- 7. The method as defined in claim 1 further including the step of controlling intensity of the laser beam to minimize multiphonon creation, thereby minimizing damage to the cell.
- 8. A method for sorting nonabsorbing particles from absorbing particles using one or more optical traps comprising the steps of:
providing a diffractive optical element for receiving a laser beam and forming a plurality of separate laser beams; and providing a focusing element downstream from said diffractive optical element, said diffractive optical element cooperating with said focusing element to separately converge each of the laser beams to form a substantially focussed spot for forming a separate optical trap within the focused spot for each of the particles using one of the separate laser beams for each particle, passing absorbing and nonabsorbing particles through the optical trap whereby absorption of light obliterates the absorbing particles nonspecifically so as to reduce them to smaller pieces; separating the small pieces from the undamaged nonabsorbing particles left behind in the optical traps; and removing the nonabsorbing particles from the optical traps.
- 9. A method for simultaneously producing multiple spatially resolved structures through photochemistry on a material using at least one of a plurality of holographic optical traps and an illumination spot in conjunction with an optical trap comprising the steps of;
providing a diffractive optical element for receiving a laser beam and forming a plurality of separate laser beams; providing a focusing element downstream from said diffractive optical element, which cooperates with said focusing element to separately converge each of the laser beams to form a separate optical trap for processing at least one particle; providing a computer executing a program to control placement of the optical trap within a three-dimensional accessible volume and to provide independent modification of the optical properties of the optical trap; and tuning the intensity of the separate laser beams to achieve selected photochemical transformation of the material to facilitate controlled photochemistry in a volume associated with a diffraction-limited focal volume of the optical trap and an illumination spot, and manipulating the location and intensity of at least one of the optical trap and the illumination spot with one of the optical traps to selectively induce photochemical transformations in multiple regions to thereby fabricate multiple copies of a photochemically-defined pattern; and
- 10. The method as defined in claim 9 including the step of defining multiple functions for a plurality of the optical trap in a user-specified pattern in three dimensions.
Government Interests
[0001] The portion of this invention relating to spatially resolved photochemistry using holographic optical traps was made with U.S. Government support provided by the National Science Foundation through Grant Number DMR-9730189 and by the MRSEC program of the NSF through Grant Number DMR-9880595. The portion of this invention relating to sorting nonabsorbing from absorbing particles using optical traps was made with U.S. Government support provided by the National Science Foundation through Grant Number DMR-9730189.